I have a Seth Lover SH55n 4-wire pickup - had it from new. If I wire it as instructed - connect and isolate the RED+WHITE wires, connect GREEN to the shield and earth, and take the signal from the BLACK wire, the sound is incredibly thin and lacking any bass - clearly the two side of the pickup out are of phase.
I am testing this without any other wiring - just hooking the jack socket up to the pickup.
The pole pieces seem to be correct, one is north the other south. So as far as I can work out, either the wiring colour coding is wrong, or one coil is upside down. If the colours are wrong I could just hook it up with colours swapped around but a continuity check shows the coils are BLACK~WHITE and RED~GREEN with the the neck side and screws on the RED+GREEN side which seems to be correct.
Testing the guitar with different connections, I get the creamiest sound with BLACK+GREEN joined to earth and RED+WHITE joined as hot output.
I've been Googling all day and found a few reports of apparently mis-wired SD pickups. In production, can I presume the two coils are normally wound exactly the same way but one of them is turned over to reverse its phase - so the opposite N~S poles bring them back into phase? If one coil was mounted the wrong way, reversing the red and green wires would fix the phase problem but will the result be exactly the same as turning over the coil?
...yes, I'd then have two in-phase signals but now one of the coils would be grounded at the start and the other grounded at the finish (I think) - I can't get my head around it TBH! Would that make an audible difference because maybe the hot end of the coil is closer to the bobbin (2k ohms closer as well as physically closer) - with a change of capacitance?
Listening to the guitar with one coil wired up, I could hear a difference if the coil start was ground or hot.
Thanks for any advice ~ John
I am testing this without any other wiring - just hooking the jack socket up to the pickup.
The pole pieces seem to be correct, one is north the other south. So as far as I can work out, either the wiring colour coding is wrong, or one coil is upside down. If the colours are wrong I could just hook it up with colours swapped around but a continuity check shows the coils are BLACK~WHITE and RED~GREEN with the the neck side and screws on the RED+GREEN side which seems to be correct.
Testing the guitar with different connections, I get the creamiest sound with BLACK+GREEN joined to earth and RED+WHITE joined as hot output.
I've been Googling all day and found a few reports of apparently mis-wired SD pickups. In production, can I presume the two coils are normally wound exactly the same way but one of them is turned over to reverse its phase - so the opposite N~S poles bring them back into phase? If one coil was mounted the wrong way, reversing the red and green wires would fix the phase problem but will the result be exactly the same as turning over the coil?
...yes, I'd then have two in-phase signals but now one of the coils would be grounded at the start and the other grounded at the finish (I think) - I can't get my head around it TBH! Would that make an audible difference because maybe the hot end of the coil is closer to the bobbin (2k ohms closer as well as physically closer) - with a change of capacitance?
Listening to the guitar with one coil wired up, I could hear a difference if the coil start was ground or hot.
Thanks for any advice ~ John